Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
1 April 2005 Kurloff Cells in Peripheral Blood and Organs of Wild Capybaras
Luis Fernando Jara, Jairo Mauricio Sánchez, Hernán Alvarado, Fernando Nassar-Montoya
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Peripheral blood and tissue from twenty-two free-ranging, hunter-killed capybaras (Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris) collected between December 1996 and April 1997 in Cas-anare, Colombia (5°58′N and 71°33′W), were examined by light microscopy for Kurloff cells (KCs). Kurloff cells were observed in the blood of one pregnant adult female, and in organs from all the animals, including spleen (21 of 22 animals), liver (18 of 21), lungs (13 of 21), ovary (8 of 11), uterus (7 of 10), bone marrow (13 of 20), kidney (8 of 22), adrenal gland (6 of 20), and lymph node (4 of 14). The anatomic distribution of the KC in the wild capybaras was similar to that of the guinea pig.

Luis Fernando Jara, Jairo Mauricio Sánchez, Hernán Alvarado, and Fernando Nassar-Montoya "Kurloff Cells in Peripheral Blood and Organs of Wild Capybaras," Journal of Wildlife Diseases 41(2), 431-434, (1 April 2005). https://doi.org/10.7589/0090-3558-41.2.431
Received: 9 October 2002; Published: 1 April 2005
KEYWORDS
Capybara
Hydrochaeris
Kurloff body
Kurloff cell
Back to Top